South Africa

GROUNDUP

Rondebosch Golf Club lease renewal under fire from housing activists

Archive Photo: Zolile Mabuda, who currently live on Darling Street in Cape Town, protests for equal access to inner city land during the occupation of Rondebosch Golf Club by the housing activist group Reclaim the City, 21 March 2019. Image: Tessa Knight

The City of Cape Town renewed the Rondebosch Golf Club lease on Thursday, but says half the land is below the acceptable floodline for housing. But Ndifuna Ukwazi disagrees saying it can show that two-thirds of the land could be used for housing instead of “exclusive use by a few”.

The City of Cape Town made its final decision to renew the lease with the Rondebosch Golf Club on 29 October, despite objections that the land could be better used for social housing.

The City says the area’s floodline poses a constraint on development with 23.72ha of the 45.99ha property below the 1 in 50 year flood line.

“The golf course was designed to prevent the flooding of neighbouring properties,” the mayoral committee in-principle approval of the lease reads.

Experts from the City’s Spatial Planning and Urban Design Department conducted studies of the Rondebosch Golf Club that identified several constraints. The City said that access for vehicles and public transport will pose an issue; that the golf course is home to trees, shrubs, and 75 different species of birds; and it also manages pollution in the adjacent Black River.

“Polluted water is pumped from the river and gravity-fed back to the golf course holding dam. The process filters the water before it is utilised on the golf course,” the City told GroundUp.

But activist organisation Ndifuna Ukwazi condemned the decision in a statement on Friday, claiming that at least two-thirds of the site can be used to develop affordable housing, according to a research report the organisation published last year.

Ndifuna Ukwazi said that the development could be done in “a sensitive way that would minimise the environmental impact of the development” and that a “water sensitive urban design approach” could be taken for developing affordable housing.

The report, taking into account the environmental constraints, says 2,500 housing units can still be developed on the site.

Ndifuna Ukwazi said that in every case it has advocated for the development of affordable housing on well-located public land, the City argued that there were constraints on the site which made development impractical.

“Cape Town has 24 golf courses, ten of which are on public land. And it’s not just golf courses, the City owns more than 87,000 pieces of land, but continues to lease out well-located public land for the exclusive use by a few at the expense of hundreds of thousands of Capetonians that desperately need housing,” Ndifuna Ukwazi said in a statement. DM

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  • Glyn Morgan says:

    Has Liezl Human for GroundUp checked the race of the people playing golf on that golf course lately? Please go one day and take a “census” and publish the results. It will probably surprise the readers.

  • Taryn Baldwin says:

    Glyn, I’m curious, what is your purpose in proposing a race census at the golf club?

  • Glyn Morgan says:

    Hi Taryn Baldwin. Ground up and others seem to be anti golf clubs as they are a perceived “rich white” establishments. Which is wrong. All races need to get involved in any sport they want to play. Getting rid of large, green areas of sports fields sounds great for housing for the poor etc. BUT those large green sports fields are used by all races and are open to the public. Cities need green lungs. Check it out. So what about the lack of housing for the poor? Open your eyes, there are at least three large military areas in suburban Cape Town that would accommodate hundreds of thousands of economic and sub-economic houses! Plus the huge, unused railway land in Salt River. What about Scala in Simonstown? Totally redundant navy land! So why the anti-golf club hype? Pure politics, without a thought for the poor. Here is a hint – P.DeLille is a member of Rondebosch Golf Club. She will want Mowbray Golf Club to be used for economic housing. Which will of course shoot herself in the foot because she lives in Pinelands! (For the curious, Mowbray GC is in Pinelands and Rondebosch GC is in Mowbray!)

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